Absolutely bo, unique chants, original to each club:I prefer English atmospheres any day. Sporadic, reactive and humorous.
The Australian support in England looks like Merv Hughes has gone around the RSL's, emptied a few hundred pensioners out and given them matching green or yellow T Shirts.All true. However, when we do there's normally alcohol, singing and self deprecating humour involved. For example The Hollies stand at Edgbaston is different to both Lords AND the IPL and the Aussies simply can't compete with the Barmy Army on away Ashes tours.
‘We all follow (insert club) over land and sea...’
Cardiff, Swansea, Wrexham and NewportI wish we would sing this more now that it is factually true, about "over land and sea". As I don't remember us playing a competitive game in another land before this season.
fairy snuff! but they were in the same division as us and the head office of my company in the UK is in Newport, so trips down the M4 are too plentiful for me to think of them as a foreign land, even if the signs look like the words have been constructed by getting a cat to walk over a computer keyboard.Cardiff, Swansea, Wrexham and Newport
Absolutely bo, unique chants, original to each club:
‘We’ve got super (insert manager), He knows exactly what we need...’
or
‘You’ve seen (insert club) now f**k off home’
or
‘(Insert score) and you f**ked it up’
or
‘We all follow (insert club) over land and sea...’
etc etc
Tracing paper bog roll always helpfully supplied by British rail on the way to the game. And thank goodness, as Andratx rolls from home would never have made it over the northstand fence!I do miss an expertly luzzed bog roll though, emerging from the midst of swaying terrace behind the goal, looping over the crossbar and wrapping itself round the goalie’s ankles.
So basically, your "thing" is attracting foreign regimes' money so they buy big players for you, without any cascading effect onto your National team?This is basically it. Because violence was so bad in the 80s the next 40 years was dedicated to methods to prevent it. It's pretty obvious the most violent are likely to also be the most vocal.
It also has never been an English way to support teams with flares, drums and huge banners. Every country has their thing, our thing is providing the highest quality football, and a huge football pyramid which is unrivaled anywhere in the world.
"Watching on the telly".It's just noise though isn't it? Watching on the telly I thought they were largely bland atmospheres in Marseilles and Rome. Yes a lot of noise, an extreme amount of noise, and awe-inspiring to see at the start, but where was the connection with the game? Where was the ebb and flow and the crescendo as the home team attacked? Were there recognisable songs and chants? You couldn't hear the away fans at all, which seems to me to be lacking one of the key parts of a great atmosphere, the back and forth between rival supporters. Noise and pyro, fine, but an atmosphere is something to be savoured.
That's not saying that English atmospheres are generally much good in these days of allseater stadia, usually dull, but they can sometimes be amazing, and I'd take that anyday over the European version
Based on what evidence you say that?Palace tried bringing in a Euro atmosphere and everyone laughs at them. It’s just not how we watch football.
The big things we have are humour and reaction. There’s no wit, no banter, no ebb and flow overseas. Just the same song droning on, uninterrupted even when they concede a goal. English crowds are usually reactive, and while this makes the base atmosphere worse, it allows room to build, room for a funny new song or witty comment about an opponent or referee.
The non stop droning noise on the television and at the games I've been to.Based on what evidence you say that?
I see.The non stop droning noise on the television and at the games I've been to.
It's been coming slowly buy surely for quite some time . . . . .Welcome to the nanny state, it’s going to get worse, CCTV is everywhere and will continue until it covers literally everywhere, then add in facial recognition. Forget the nanny state, welcome to 1984.
The non stop droning noise on the television and at the games I've been to.
I’ve read it and agree it’s a good read. Yes there’s a lot of wit and vicious put downs in it. He also talks about internet / message board wind ups and a couple of the away trip stories are very similar to away days here.To be fair I thought that but then read the book A Season With Verona by Tim Parks (brilliant read) and realised that's not the case - there's plenty of wit and humour (often far more crass than here) in Italian football at least, where city rivalries are much more heated in general life let alone football
I do think the atmosphere overall over here isn't as bad as its made out - we are just very reactive to what's going on on the pitch, how it's always been. When its good it can still be brilliant. You can't deny though that unfortunately there has been a sterilisation here compared to other countries, which is great in some respects (far more safe and family friendly etc), but shit in others (more expensive and restricted, more tourists etc = a drop off in overall atmosphere)
You cringe when you hear that?And it's (insert club) , its (insert club) FC, we're by far the greatest team, the world has ever seen.
This chant is absolutely SH!TE and I cringe everytime our fans sing it.